From: Rick Mur (rick@rickmur.com)
Date: Wed Dec 10 2008 - 13:02:53 ARST
Auto-RP does the same thing, highest IP address wins.
With BSR you can set the dr-priority to influence this.
Rick Mur
CCIE #21946 (R&S)
CCNP, CCIP, JNCIA-ER, MCSE
rick@rickmur.com
On Wed, 10 Dec 2008 14:57:23 +0000
"Marko Milivojevic" <markom@markom.info> wrote:
BSR will automatically select the one with the higher address.
Take a look at this document:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/solutions_docs/ip_multicast/White_papers/rps.html#wp1033721
--
Marko
CCIE #18427 (SP)
My network blog: http://cisco.markom.info/
On Wed, Dec 10, 2008 at 14:47, Ed Man <networkexpert08@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Group,
>
> R7#sho ip pim rp map in-use
> PIM Group-to-RP Mappings
>
> Group(s) 224.0.0.0/4
> RP 10.224.1.2 (?), v2
> Info source: 10.224.1.2 (?), via bootstrap, priority 0, holdtime
>150
> Uptime: 01:16:14, expires: 00:02:07
> RP 10.224.1.1 (?), v2
> Info source: 10.224.1.2 (?), via bootstrap, priority 0, holdtime
>150
> Uptime: 01:17:52, expires: 00:02:11
>
> Dynamic (Auto-RP or BSR) RPs in cache that are in use:
> Group(s): 224.0.0.0/4, *RP: 10.224.1.2*, expires: 00:00:55
>
>
> Don't know why the RP is 10.224.1.2 but not 10.224.1.1?
> Some book said the smallest candidate RP address makes the tie-break.
>
> Could you please give me some clues?
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